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Description

This major works collection surveys the nature of Muslim Diasporas in the west from a sociological perspective, exploring the issues of migration, integration, identity, politics, Islamophobia and radicalisation.

This four-volume collected works is the state of the art on the research and scholarship on Muslim Diasporas in the West. From canonical works to the latest trends in research, these volumes added to the understanding of ethnicity, equality and diversity in relation to Muslims in the west. The articles explore the philosophies of multiculturalism, integration and interculturalism. They also analyse issues of identity politics, Islamophobia and radicalisation. This major works collection suitably captures the significance of past research and its importance for further scholarship in relation to Muslims and Islam across Europe, North America and Australia.

Table of Contents

Volume I. MIGRATION AND DIASPORA

Part 1. History

1. Nabil Matar (2009) Britons and Muslims in the early modern period: from prejudice to (a theory of) toleration, Patterns of Prejudice 43(3-4): 213-231,

6. Fetzer, Joel S and Soper, Christopher J (2005) Muslims and the State in Britain, France and Germany, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, chapter 1: Explaining the accommodation of Muslim religious practices in Western Europe.

7. Cesari, Jocelyne (2004) When Islam and Democracy Meet: Muslims in Europe and in the United States, chapter 4: The Secularisation of Islamic Institutions in Europe and the United States: Two Approaches, Basingstoke: Palgrave-Macmillan.

13. Silverstein, Paul A (2005) ‘Immigrant Racialization and the New Savage Slot: Race, Migration, and Immigration in the New Europe’, Annual Review of Anthropology 34: 363-384.

14. Ahmed, Akbar S and Hastings Donnan (1994) ‘Islam in the age of postmodernity’, in AS Ahmed and H Donnan (eds.) Islam, Globalisation and Postmodernity, Basingstoke: Routledge, chapter 1, pp. 1-20. (Just before the listing of following chapters)

17. Amir Moazami, Schirin and Salvatore, Armando (2003) ‘Gender, Generation, and the Reform of Tradition: From Muslim majority societies to Western Europe’, in S Allievi and JS Nielsen (eds.) Muslim Networks and Transnational Communities in and across Europe, Leiden: Brill.

18. Voas, David and Fleischmann, Fenella (2012) ‘Islam Moves West: Religious Change in the First and Second Generations’, Annual Review of Sociology 38: 525-545.

19. Jacob, Konstanze and Kalter, Frank (2013) ‘Intergenerational Change in Religious Salience Among Immigrant Families in Four European Countries’, International Migration, 51(3): 38-56.

20. Fleischmann, Fenella and Phalet, Karen (2012) ‘Integration and religiosity among the Turkish second generation in Europe: a comparative analysis across four capital cities’, Ethnic and Racial Studies 35(2): 320-341.

50. Mandeville, Peter (2009) ‘Muslim Transnational Identity and State Responses in Europe and the UK after 9/11: Political Community, Ideology and Authority’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 35(3): 491-506.

59. Spalek, Basia (2014) ‘Community Engagement for Counterterrorism in Britain: An Exploration of the Role of "Connectors" in Countering Takfiri Jihadist Terrorism’, Studies in Conflict & Terrorism 37(10): 825-841.

60. Macdonald, Laura Z (2011) ‘Securing Identities, Resisting Terror: Muslim Youth Work in the UK and its Implications for Security’, Religion, State and Society 39(2-3): 177-189.

Part 16. The radicalisation discourse

61. Mythen, Gabe, Walklate, Sandra and Khan, Fatima (2009) ‘‘I’m a Muslim, but I’m not a Terrorist’: Victimization, Risky Identities and the Performance of Safety’, British Journal of Criminology 49(6): 736-754.

About the Series

The Routledge Critical Conceptsin Sociology series provides concise, authoritative reprints of key articles in sociology, collecting the essential secondary literature on key subjects. Edited by acknowledged leaders in the field, each set puts the development of fundamental concepts into their historical context, and provides students and researchers with a clear snapshot of current thinking. Collections span a multitude of subject areas, including religion, multiculturalism and celebrity.